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Judi Lynn

(162,406 posts)
Tue Apr 27, 2021, 01:56 AM Apr 2021

What Doomed a Sprawling City Near St. Louis 1,000 Years Ago?

Excavations at Cahokia, famous for its pre-Columbian mounds, challenge the idea that residents destroyed the city through wood clearing.



Cahokia, across the Mississippi from present-day St. Louis, was a city of roughly 20,000 people at its peak in the 1100s, but was largely abandoned by 1350.Credit...Whitney Curtis for The New York Times

By Asher Elbein
Published April 24, 2021
Updated April 26, 2021

A thousand years ago, a city rose on the banks of the Mississippi River, near what eventually became the city of St. Louis. Sprawling over miles of rich farms, public plazas and earthen mounds, the city — known today as Cahokia — was a thriving hub of immigrants, lavish feasting and religious ceremony. At its peak in the 1100s, Cahokia housed 20,000 people, greater than contemporaneous Paris.

By 1350, Cahokia had largely been abandoned, and why people left the city is one of the greatest mysteries of North American archaeology.

Now, some scientists are arguing that one popular explanation — Cahokia had committed ecocide by destroying its environment, and thus destroyed itself — can be rejected out of hand. Recent excavations at Cahokia led by Caitlin Rankin, an archaeologist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, show that there is no evidence at the site of human-caused erosion or flooding in the city.

Her team’s research, published in the May/June issue of Geoarcheology suggests that stories of great civilizations seemingly laid low by ecological hubris may say more about our current anxieties and assumptions than the archaeological record.

. . .



A mural at the Cahokia Mounds Museum and Interpretive Center shows the city during its heyday, circa 1100.Credit...L.K. Townsend/Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site

More:
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/24/science/cahokia-mounds-floods.html

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What Doomed a Sprawling City Near St. Louis 1,000 Years Ago? (Original Post) Judi Lynn Apr 2021 OP
i have to get down there. in my state, never been. mopinko Apr 2021 #1
Hope you make it! I never heard of Cahokia until a few years ago. I was totally uninformed. Judi Lynn Apr 2021 #3
We always went there on field trips in grade school. forgotmylogin Apr 2021 #2
It must be quite a sight from the top, too! So interesting! Thanks. ⭐️ Judi Lynn Apr 2021 #4

mopinko

(71,840 posts)
1. i have to get down there. in my state, never been.
Tue Apr 27, 2021, 07:26 AM
Apr 2021

it is a long drive from me, tho. il is a very long state.
went all the way to the southern tip on our 1st family camping trip. pretty amazing.

Judi Lynn

(162,406 posts)
3. Hope you make it! I never heard of Cahokia until a few years ago. I was totally uninformed.
Wed Apr 28, 2021, 03:32 AM
Apr 2021

It gets more interesting each time I read another article on it.

Really living in hope they uncover more information with new technology. Undoubtedly there's a vast amount of material still hidden which will be within reach, in time. So much to learn.

The actual size of the place must have been impressive when it was in use.

Best wishes for an enjoyable trip there, sometime.



forgotmylogin

(7,677 posts)
2. We always went there on field trips in grade school.
Tue Apr 27, 2021, 08:48 AM
Apr 2021

I saw the slide show and climbed the stairs lots and lots of times!

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